Hello,
I was sure there is no difference in Python and Sage. However, when I
try to return "I_0" in _latex_ function of my class, it typesets as
I_0, because somehow it gets wrapped into \text{I\_0}. When I change
the return value to 'I_0' everything works as expected. Why is it so
and are there
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 12:31 PM, Nathan Carter wrote:
>
>
>> > It would be nice if @interactdemonstrations and cells (both read-only
>> > and read-write) could be added to blog entries.
>>
>> Indeed, exactly.
>
> Although this definitely sounds cool, I'm wondering what features
> already exist th
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 12:10 PM, kcrisman wrote:
>
> This reminds me that this brought up another interesting question.
> Why are the pdfs I generate sometimes significantly smaller than the
> sws files? In general I would have thought that the various images
> etc. and formatting would make the
> > It would be nice if @interactdemonstrations and cells (both read-only
> > and read-write) could be added to blog entries.
>
> Indeed, exactly.
Although this definitely sounds cool, I'm wondering what features
already exist that are not this fancy. Here's the limit of my
knowledge on how to
Stephen Hartke wrote:
> 2) Note that the "%hide" boxes still appear, but the "%hideall" boxes do
> not. It would be handy if there was a compromise between these: a box that
> was hidden for printing, but was easy to change while editing (the problem I
> find with "%hideall" boxes is that after
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 10:04 AM, Jason Grout wrote:
>
> kcrisman wrote:
> > I don't believe that turning a notebook worksheet into a pdf is
> > implemented (and thanks to Dan D. for SageTeX, which unfortunately
>
I have been printing worksheets to PDF files using my web browser as William
suggest
This reminds me that this brought up another interesting question.
Why are the pdfs I generate sometimes significantly smaller than the
sws files? In general I would have thought that the various images
etc. and formatting would make the pdfs bloat, but the sws would be a
nice tight text file - w
kcrisman wrote:
>
>> Though it's not perfect, what I do is click the Print button in the
>> notebook, just to the left of "Worksheet", then do "print to pdf",
>> which is an option in most operating systems. At least you get a
>> fairly accurate rendition of the worksheet.
>
> This is probably
>
> Though it's not perfect, what I do is click the Print button in the
> notebook, just to the left of "Worksheet", then do "print to pdf",
> which is an option in most operating systems. At least you get a
> fairly accurate rendition of the worksheet.
This is probably sufficient for my needs
kcrisman wrote:
> Dear Support,
>
> I don't believe that turning a notebook worksheet into a pdf is
> implemented (and thanks to Dan D. for SageTeX, which unfortunately I
> haven't been able to use properly yet, and Rob B. for his interesting
> experiments the other way). And that's fine, though
Kevin Loranger wrote:
> After I log into SAENB:
> It looks like jsMath failed to set up properly (error code -7). I will try
> to keep going, but it could get ugly.
>
see
http://wiki.sagemath.org/faq#IgetanerrorfromjsMathorthemathsymbolsdon.27tlookrightwhendisplayinginthenotebook
Thanks,
Jaso
I had the same problem. A workaround is to click the jsMath button in
the bottom right hand corner of your notebook and choose Options, then
set "Use native Unicode fonts" radio button.
On Feb 2, 1:34 pm, Kevin Loranger wrote:
> After I log into SAENB:
> It looks like jsMath failed to set up pro
After I log into SAENB:
It looks like jsMath failed to set up properly (error code -7). I will try
to keep going, but it could get ugly.
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